LeAnn’s Top Ten

Out of the books I read this year, my top ten are almost all science fiction and fantasy, and heavy on young adult novels. It was a good year.

1. By far my favorite book of the year was A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness. I could not put down this young adult horror fantasy and I couldn’t stop crying at the end. The writing is beautiful and the story of a child dealing with the loss of his mother is heartbreaking. One thing I didn’t mention in my review is that the artwork throughout the book is absolutely stunning, too. I was running my hands over Jim Kay’s illustrations, pulling the book closer to my face, trying to view every little element. Beautiful. [review]

2. Over the Christmas holiday I finished Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, and before I was even a fourth of the way through I knew it would be a favorite this year. Ready Player One is for every geek who was raised in or loves the 1980s. If you were a gamer, or you know 80s sitcoms, or you can recite lines to every John Hughes film like I can, this book is like a big, sloppy kiss just for you. Okay, it’s more of a kiss to the gamers of the 80s, which I was not, but even though those gaming references were over my head, this is just one hell of an action-packed romp. Go read Jodi’s or Christa’s reviews to hear more about it, or better yet just go read the book. It’s that good.

3. Maureen McHugh’s short story collection, After the Apocalypse, is more than it sounds. I know it sounds like stories dealing with zombies or out-of-hand artificial intelligence or a future disease-ravaged planet, and the stories do involve these things, but they’re so much more. For instance, “The Naturalist” is not really about blood-thirsty zombies, but it’s about how the world is dealing with the zombies, which are put in their own preserve, and we really look at them and even start sympathizing with them. They aren’t just scary creatures that we know are the enemies but it dives in so much deeper. This collection takes these apocalyptic themes one step further and relationships between characters are really analyzed and not always resolved. The stories are surprising, interesting, and hauntingly realistic. I’m still working on a full review of this collection because I need to re-read some of these stories.

4., 5., & 6. Patrick Ness is all over my best-of list this year. From now on, I will obsessively read anything he writes. Besides A Monster Calls, I read his Chaos Walking trilogy this year which made me want to punch him in the face and hug him at the same time. That takes talent. He sucked me into the future world he created and I loved and cheered for the characters while I cried for and cursed them. Stupid, awesome Patrick Ness.

7. Another short story collection I loved this year was Machine of Death. The stories all had to include a machine that spit out vague death predictions, but the authors could go anywhere they wanted with that, and they did. The premise pulled me in, but some of the stories went so much further than I could’ve imagined. They are putting together a Machine of Death 2 and I only hope the stories are as interesting. Bravo. [review]

8. Mat Johnson’s Pym is so hard to describe but it’s so awesome. Social commentary and satire run rampant throughout Pym, all starting with the discussion of whiteness in Edgar Allen Poe’s only novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket. The characters soon uncover things, like the potential that the novel may not be fiction but fact, and this leads them to Antarctica. The novel then turns into a tale of monsters, slavery, and escape, but it all seems to go together. I’m still not sure how Mat Johnson pulled it off, but he did. [review]

9. I just finished Brian Selznick’s The Invention of Hugo Cabret, and what took me so long? It’s not like I hadn’t heard of it. I think this is the case of too many books to read and not enough time. I’m sure this made best-of lists years ago, but it’s finally hitting mine now. The story is set in the early 20th century and follows young Hugo, who lives in a train station maintaining the clocks, and his passion for automatons. Using his deceased father’s notes, he works on an automaton he recovered from a destroyed museum, but problems start happening for him when he meets some eccentric people who are interested in his automaton. Easily the best parts of the book are the illustrations. The book is over 500 pages long, but over 200 of them are gorgeous illustrations. I found myself longing for more of them and less words. I even cursed when I read things that would’ve been drawn beautifully. This book is solely on my top list for the gorgeous illustrations that mimic the silent films that are discussed throughout the book. Great.

10. I debated whether I should include this young adult novel in my top ten, but I really did love Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs. When I read it I was smiling and gasping and trying to figure out what was going to happen next. It’s part horror, adventure, fantasy, and even some family drama and I think all the pieces fit together perfectly. I can’t wait for the next in the series. [review]

Honorable Mentions: I can’t help but throw three honorable mentions into the mix. I don’t think these are the best books of the year, but they made me smile or laugh out loud, and that has to account for something. Anya’s Ghost by Vera Brosgol restored my faith in graphic novels, and I can’t help but love Tina Fey’s Bossypants and Mindy Kaling’s Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) because I really admire smart, funny women. Grab any of these if you need a pick me up.

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Written By

LeAnn Suchy

I'm an avid reader and librarian in the Twin Cities who loves to read almost everything but mysteries. If someone gets killed in the first chapter and a detective has to figure out who did it, that's not for me. My recent favorite obsessions are post-apocalyptic and dystopian fiction. If you have any suggestions, shout them out.

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2 Comments

OMG, I just bought one of Patrick Ness’s books and can’t wait to sink my mind into it. Love your top ten list. I just read Hugo this year too, and my daughter read it and then my son read it. We just bought Selznick’s new book and can’t wait to read his next visual masterpiece. I just finished Mockingjay and can hardly wait for the first movie. I would recommend the Birthmarked series, the last book comes out in 2012 and they are great teen sci-fi in my opinion by a MN author.

@Laura (Booksnob), Laura, I’ve been reading about the Birthmarked series on your blog and I did add it to my to-read list! It sounds like it’s right up my alley. As for Patrick Ness, I think you’ll love him. He has one way of warming your heart and squeezing the life out of it at the same time.